North Carolina’s backlogged autopsies delaying justice, prosecutors say

Read the original article and watch the video on the WRAL News website.

Despite funding increases and legislative support, North Carolinaโ€™s Office of the Chief Medical Examiner remains backlogged due to a national shortage of pathologists and a surge in subpoenas requiring experts to testify in person.

Getting an autopsy report in North Carolina after someone dies can take months. Despite recent funding for the medical examinerโ€™s office, prosecutors say the backlog of autopsies is slowing down justice.

Simply put, the stateโ€™s medical examinerโ€™s office is overloaded. A huge influx in funding helped. But whatโ€™s straining the system isnโ€™t the caseload now, itโ€™s the courts.

Dorleen Richardson is waiting for an autopsy on her husband, Antony, who was killed by Johnston County deputies on Jan. 25 following a mental health crisis. Her garage is still riddled with bullet holes, reminding her of the day he died.

โ€œHis feet were there, and his body was there,โ€ Richardson said pointing to the floor of her garage.

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Franklin County Fentanyl, Heroin, and Cocaine Dealer Sentenced to Over 10 Years in Prison

Read the original article on the US Justice Department website.

Ahmod Talley

WILMINGTON, N.C. โ€“ A federal judge sentenced Ahmod Talley to over 10 years in federal prison for selling fentanyl, heroin, and cocaine in Franklin County.ย  On January 14, 2026, Inmate Talley pleaded guilty to conspiracy to sell and possess with the intent to sell heroin, fentanyl, and cocaine, possession with intent to sell heroin and fentanyl, possession with intent to sell cocaine, and two counts of possession of a gun in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime.

โ€œWe recognize the devastating impact drug addiction and overdoses have on families in our communities. This sentence sends a message, understand clearly: when you sell deadly poison to our kids and families just to make a little bit of money, you will pay serious consequences. Dope dealers lose their freedom for decades. This prolific drug dealer earned every day of his prison sentence, and the residents of Eastern North Carolina will be safer while heโ€™s locked up. Simple Lesson: Drugs Kill, Prison Awaits โ€“ Do Right.โ€ said U.S. Attorney Ellis Boyle.

The investigation into Inmate Talleyโ€™s drug dealing started after a fatal drug overdose in Franklin County. Franklin County Sheriffโ€™s Office (FCSO) and Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) investigated and determined that Inmate Talley sold fentanyl to the victim three days before the death. Ultimately, law enforcement pulled Inmate Talley over, and found a loaded .40 caliber handgun, bindles of fentanyl labeled โ€œTry Thisโ€ (like the ones found in the overdose victimโ€™s house) and bindles perversely labeled โ€œLife Support.โ€  Law enforcement searched Inmate Talleyโ€™s house, finding a .380 caliber pistol, cocaine, and marijuana. They also searched Inmate Talleyโ€™s grandmotherโ€™s house, where they found a rifle and 350 bindles of a heroin and fentanyl mix stamped โ€œLife Supportโ€ and, apparently marketed at children, โ€œGoosebumps.โ€

โ€œTodayโ€™s sentence underscores the power of coordinated law enforcement efforts to hold drug dealers accountable when their actions cost someone their life,โ€ said Mark M. Zito, Special Agent in Charge of Homeland Security Investigations Charlotte. โ€œThrough the combined work of the FCSO, HSI, and our partners in the Eastern District of North Carolina, HSI remains committed to targeting those who distribute lethal fentanyl and other narcotics in our communities at the expense of public safety.โ€

Ellis Boyle, U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of North Carolina, made the announcement after sentencing by Chief U.S. District Judge Richard E. Myers II.  FCSO and HSI investigated the case, and Assistant United States Attorney Casey L. Peaden prosecuted the case.

Leland man pleads guilty to death by distribution

Read the original article and watch the video on the WECT 6 website.

WILMINGTON, N.C. (WECT) – A Leland man has pleaded guilty to charges involving a fatal overdose in 2022.

42-year-old William McKinley Huckaby pleaded guilty to death by distribution and attempted trafficking in methamphetamine, according to a release from the District Attorneyโ€™s Office.

James Ray Lewis, 42, died from fentanyl toxicity on June 24, 2022. Investigators from the New Hanover County Sheriffโ€™s Office discovered a syringe and other drug paraphernalia near his body, which suggested fentanyl ingestion.

Detectives later discovered text messages between the two men. In one message, Huckaby encouraged Lewis to steal vacuums from a retailer in exchange for drugs, according to authorities.

The other messages also indicate that Huckaby had previously profited from tools Lewis stole in exchange for drugs, according to the DAโ€™s Office.

Law enforcement claimed that Huckaby had roughly 26 grams of methamphetamine and a dosage unit of fentanyl on him when he was arrested.

โ€œWilliam Huckaby encouraged those severely addicted to opioids to steal merchandise for him with the promise of fentanyl for payment,โ€ District Attorney Jason W. Smith said. โ€œHuckabyโ€™s exploitation of the addicted represents why our lawmakers enacted the Death by Distribution law. In many instances, severe addiction disrupts the decision-making parts of the brain, and those who profit while exploiting this addiction will be sent to prison.โ€

Huckaby was sentenced to 76 to 104 months in prison and 2 years in the residential recovery program TROSA afterward.

Newport woman sentenced for 2nd-degree murder

Read the original article on the WNCT TV9 website.

BEAUFORT, N.C. (WNCT) โ€” Amanda Alice Blanton, 36, of Newport, pled guilty to 2nd degree murder in the death of Daniel Andrew Brisson, 46, also of Newport, and has been sentenced to 238-298 months in the Department of Adult Correction during the most recent term of Carteret County Criminal Superior Court.

The case was investigated by the Carteret County Sheriffโ€™s Office, and the lead investigator was Courtney Howell. Assistant District Attorney David L. Spence prosecuted the case and Resident Superior Court Judge Clint Rowe presided over the matter.

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